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The cemetery consists of 17 acres of manicured lawn surrounded by 33.5 acres of woods. The  visitor center, where information and brochures are attainable, is to the left as the visitor enters the front gates. Entering through the gates, the visitor will see the impressive Memorial Chapel encompassed by a stone terrace directly in front of them. The chapel includes massive bronze doors embellished with bronze cartouches depicting military “virtues”, a sparkling mosaic ceiling and a colorful stained glass windows showcasing the Army insignia representing the men and woman that rest in the cemetery.

On the lower level of the terrace, two pylons face each other across a quote by Eisenhower about the sacrifice of military service members.  The pylons display the battle movements in the western European Operations (on the right) and those related to the Battle of the Bulge (on the left). On the reverse of the maps, 371 names of those missing in action are inscribed. Twenty-three bronze rosettes identify service members who have been recovered since the inscriptions were made and now rest in known graves.

Sloping away from the terrace is the cemetery where 5,070 service members lie, many of whom lost their lives in the Battle of the Bulge and in the advance to the Rhine River. The design is a softly curving fan shape consisting of nine sections interspersed with four fountains, majestic trees, and expansive rose and rhododendron beds. It is a befittingly tranquil final resting place for these Americans who gave their all.

The cemetery was established on December 29, 1944 by the 609th Quartermaster Company of the U.S. Third Army while Allied Forces were stemming the enemy’s desperate Ardennes Offensive, one of the critical battles of World War II. The city of Luxembourg served as headquarters for General George S. Patton’s U.S. Third Army. The cemetery is the final resting place of General Patton.

(www.abmc.gov/Luxembourg)

(8 graves, 3 names on the Wall of the Missing)

Lt. Graeme L. Bow

December 16th 1921  – November 2nd 1944

751st Bomb Squadron

Plot A, Row 3, Grave 1

Lt. Robert Hugh Dickinson

unknown – January 13th 1945

751st Bomb Squadron

Wall of the Missing

Lt. Julius H. Drummond

1922 – August 24th 1944

750th Bomb Squadron

Plot B, Row 5, Grave 52

Lt. Richard I. Hibshman

July 18th 1922 – November 2nd 1944

751st Bomb Squadron

Plot A, Row 10, Grave 1

Sgt. Charles Edward Lindquist

October 4th 1922 – November 2nd 1944

751st Bomb Squadron

Plot H, Row 9, Grave 74

Lt. George P. McGee

unknown – November 2nd 1944

751st Bomb Squadron

Plot G, Row 2, Grave 18

Sgt. John Thomas Poshefko

September 8th 1918 – August 24th 1944

750th Bomb Squadron

Plot B, Row 10, Grave 53

Sgt. Ward C. Price

unknown – November 30th 1944

751st Bomb Squadron

Plot D, Row 6, Grave 22

F/O Arthur H. Richards

1921 – August 24th 1944

750th Bomb Squadron

Plot B, Row 5, Grave 46

Sgt. Marion Dwight Ross

September 25th 1921 – Februari 25th 1944

748th Bomb Squadron

Wall of the Missing

Sgt. William J. Sullivan

1916 – February 25th 1944

748th Bomb Squadron

Wall of the Missing